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Ben Cousins Hit With New Stalking, Drugs Charges

AAP

Posted Thursday, April 23, 2020 5:56 AM , updated Thursday, April 23, 2020 5:56 AM

Fallen AFL champion Ben Cousins will spend at least one more night in prison pending a bail application and has indicated he'll fight new charges against him, including aggravated stalking in Perth.

The former West Coast Eagles captain was arrested on Wednesday after allegedly being found with about 2.5 grams of methamphetamine in East Victoria Park.

Police had earlier been searching for a vehicle that was seen driving erratically in nearby Kensington.

Cousins, 41, was also charged with aggravated stalking and 13 counts of breaching a violence restraining order between April 2 and 15.

Michael Tudori, Cousins' lawyer, speaks to the media outside Armadale Magistrates Court in Perth on Thursday. Image: AAP
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Those charges relate to his ex-partner Maylea Tinecheff, whom he allegedly tried to contact via phone more than 100 times.

Cousins faced Armadale Magistrates Court on Thursday but the matter will return to court on Friday to complete his bail application.

His lawyer Michael Tudori said the charges related to Tinecheff were different to the ones Cousins previously spent almost one year in jail for, as there were no threats involved.

Tudori said Cousins had been spending time with his children under a parenting plan, but less than one month before the alleged offending, she ceased all communication.

He said whenever Cousins faced a crisis he would turn to drugs for comfort, as it was the way he "deals with stresses in his life".

Ben Cousins celebrates after winning the AFL Grand Final in 2006. Image: Getty

Tudori indicated Cousins would stand trial but no formal pleas were entered.

He later told AAP Cousins was very disappointed about being in custody.

The former premiership player and Brownlow medallist has been in and out of prison in recent years as he struggled with his meth addiction and family troubles.

He had been scheduled to face a trial last September over other alleged family violence offences, but after charges of stalking and threatening to harm Tinecheff were dropped, he pleaded guilty to 12 lesser offences.

He was sentenced to eight months in prison but it was backdated and with time already served, he was able to walk free in August.

Cousins recently opened up in an expletive-laden, paid TV documentary about his family, substance abuse and time in jail.

"I've stuffed things up royally. It's time, I think ... to get things right," he told the Seven Network.

"In a perfect world I would've liked to have come out the other side a long time ago, but it hasn't been the case."

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